Letter from Jonathan William to William Temple Franklin. Refers to receipt of two drafts of Dr. Franklin on Nathaniel Braley and Frederick Buscalier. Remarks on French export commerce to the United States., American Philosophical Society
Letter from Jonathan William to William Temple Franklin. London. Intended to return to Passy and then go on to Nantes, but found a good opportunity to embark on a vessel sailing for America., American Philosophical Society
Letter from Otho Holland Williams to Nathanael Greene. Found by inquiry that a certain Major-General can not be induced to accept employment on an expedition against the savages; shows not the least disposition for speculating in scalps., American Philosophical Society
Letter from Otho Holland Williams to Nathanael Greene. Morristown - Ordered by the Commander-in-Chief to furnish a battalion of between two and three hundred men to cover the stores and public offices in Morristown, and therefore applies to General Greene for barracks or some other cover for them., American Philosophical Society
Requests that he represent Williams's case to the committee of arrangement that is coming to camp; informs him that Williams has taken measures to clear himself of the "infamous report" regarding his conduct at Germantown, [Pa.]., American Philosophical Society
H. Williamson asks Benjamin Franklin to help twin brothers who are prisoners in England. Williamson describes that they were captured while sailing to France and that they are around the age of fourteen., American Philosophical Society
Letter from Matthias Williamson to Charles Pettit. Elizabethtown - Asking for an inquiry into an affair of one Captain Riley, of the Twelfth Pennsylvania Regiment, who impressed a horse belonging to a Mr. Salter and never returned it., American Philosophical Society
Letter from Matthias Williamson to Nathanael Greene. Elizabethtown - Introducing Mr. Aaron Woodruff, who has been an express-rider at the above post for three months, and if possible, desires his pay. If he is not paid, would like to know the amount of his wages and how the post is to be supplied with riders., American Philosophical Society
Letters written by Margaret Wister to her daughter, Catherine Haines, her son-Caspar Wistar Haines, her sister, and her daughter-in-law, Hannah Marshall Haines. Wistar's subjects range from family matters, to neighbors' activities, the health of individuals, medicinal recipes, to purchases., American Philosophical Society
Letters written by Margaret Wistar to her daughter Catherine Haines between 1774 and 1789. The topics of the letters are mainly on family life, including other family members' activities and health. There is also a letter addressed to a cousin, presumably Catherine Wistar., American Philosophical Society